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Daily Archives: April 27, 2012

I was one of several people interviewed by Michelle Chan for her piece on college newspapers’ April Fools’ Day issues. My advice: “Leave the funny stuff to The Onion.” My former Poynter colleague, Roy Peter Clark, tells her:

April Fools’ Day is one of the stupidest fake holidays ever created, and I’ve never seen an April Fools’ Day issue of anything that was any good. Even in the best of hands, the satire turns out to be pretty lame. And in the worst hands, we get these totally unnecessary scandals like the ones we’ve seen.

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From EMILY KULKUS, Syracuse Post-Standard: Any idea why it seems everyone is using Wednesday May 2 as the one-year anniversary of bin Laden’s death? (His Wikipedia page lists it, too.) I noticed the discrepancy because I worked our night desk the night Obama announced he was killed. It was a Sunday, May 1. The president announced he was dead that night, and all the papers the next morning screamed that headline, not that he’d been captured and killed the next day. What’s up?

It was the 2nd in Pakistan, as Kulkus notes in a follow-up to this email.

The Gawker media writer is up in arms over this weekend’s White House Correspondents’ Association Dinner — “a shameful display of whoredom that makes the ‘average American’ vomit in disgust, or, more likely, simply continue to disregard the findings of any ostensibly neutral journalistic outlet in favor of their own ideology of choice, because they have a fully solidified belief that the ‘mainstream media’ is little more than a bunch of ball-lapping lapdogs to whoever’s in power.”

Every year I ponder whether it’s possible to go to the Whore Dinner to cover it without being Part of the Problem, and I every year I decide that it is not. (Credit the New York Times and other news organizations who have come to the same conclusion.) And every year I and other humorless moralists write these somber diatribes about this event, and nothing ever changes, nor will it, because the media members themselves don’t give a fuck, because they like to meet celebrities, and the public doesn’t give a fuck because they already know the stars of the “mainstream media” are a bunch of patsy starfuckers who have to carefully consider how awkward next year’s Dinner might be every time they’re formulating uncomfortable questions for a politician, so who cares?

Dean finalists at the University of Maryland’s Philip Merrill College of Journalism are Lucy Dalglish, executive director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, and U.S. Department of Justice deputy counselor Deborah Leff. Both candidates spoke on campus this week.

From The Diamondback’s story on Dalglish’s visit:

While she has not spent as much time immersing herself in academia, Dalglish said her background as an authority on media law and a First Amendment public speaker would help her advance the journalism school.

“I think this could be a gathering place where some of the world’s finest journalists come,” she said. “I think there are ways to take advantage of this fabulous facility and bring more of those journalists in and interact with students, supplement the curriculum and even network with each other.”

From the story about Leff’s visit:

Deborah Leff

Although her last job in journalism was in 1992, Leff said she is still confident in her ability to address today’s changing world. …

Leff told attendees she hoped to expand internship and partnership opportunities that would benefit students interested in science and law journalism.

“My long-term goal is amazingly vague and general,” Leff said. “I want to make this school the best it can be and see us integrated and contributing to the assessment and collection of knowledge.”

I invited the Appalachian staff to comment on the brouhaha over their incorrect report about a popular Mexican restaurant closing, and the follow-up editorial scolding readers for being a little bit too concerned about their quesadillas and margaritas. Meghan Frick, association editor for editorial content at the Appalachian State University newspaper, sends this email, and points that “we tend to feel, like many college newspapers, that we have a little more room for sass on our opinion page.”

The response we saw to the Los tweets — even before we discovered our error — was the strongest and most immediate we’ve seen all year. Readers responded when athletes were accused of sexual assault and when discussion about hate crimes exploded in our town. But they’d never responded as quickly or as passionately as they did when we mistakenly tweeted that Los was closing.

We’ve never really subscribed to the “write to a fifth grade audience” model. Our student audience has proven to be savvy and capable, and we believe strongly in their intelligence. Our goal was not to condescend to them — we wanted to challenge them to engage this fiercely on all issues that affect them.

But we do understand, at a further remove from the situation, that our tone offended many of our readers. We are deeply sorry for that, just as we’re sorry for our original reporting error. We tend to feel, like many college newspapers, that we have a little more room for sass on our opinion page. That’s all that was meant by the tone of the editorial — snark, not condescension or deflection of our original responsibility.

We have gotten feedback — usually in the form of a quiet email or Facebook message — from people who loved the editorial. But we understand that, for most readers, the tone was unacceptable.

We’re all students and we’re all learning. As journalists, we learn in the form of split-second decisions. I’m fully comfortable admitting that, if I had this decision to do over again, I’d do it differently. We stand by the spirit of our editorial, but the tone in which it was delivered was far from ideal.

From ANONYMOUS (“As a relatively young journalist still trying to make it, I’d ask that you please not use my name”): The Houston Chronicle’s website today has the headline “Member of The Killers commits suicide.” I clicked it, and was linked to a video from E!

Interestingly, the AP article specifically says the deceased was not a full member of the band but did appear on tours and performed on albums in 2006 and 2008. In short, it appears a musician who played with The Killers died. That’s different from what the headline said.

This seems to be a trend that I’m seeing a lot lately: stretching the truth of a headline just a little bit in order to get clicks. Earlier this year, USA TODAY played a little fast and loose with a headline on it’s mobile app indicating that one of the Nationals hit a home run ball that struck his truck, but if you read the story, it appeared this was probably just a rumor (my letter to them that went unanswered is below).

Anyway, please keep me anonymous since I don’t want to get blackballed from journalism community. But if you start looking for this trend, you’re definitely going to see it. Again, this isn’t outright inaccurate headlines, but there are headlines that just stretch the truth a little bit. In some ways, I think that’s more damaging.

My own thoughts are that the young web producers who are under pressure to accumulate hits put their desire for traffic over their desire for an accurate headline, and the bigwigs either don’t know this is happening or are enjoying the results too much to really care.

The letter to USA Today that went unanswered:

I’m a big fan of USA TODAY (a former intern no less) and always love its coverage, particularly of Major League Baseball. But I am a little bit concerned about today’s headline regarding Washington National Jayson Werth hitting a homerun ball that may have struck his own truck. As of 6:11 p.m. today, on the paper’s mobile app, the headline reads “Jayson Werth’s home-run ball hits his truck.” On the website,
it’s couched a bit more, as “Jayson Werth: Home-run ball struck his own truck.”

The problem is, if you read the story, neither is exactly true.

USA TODAY reports that Werth hit a home-run “clear out of the stadium, and right into Werth’s very own truck – or so a groundskeeper told him.” Werth himself goes on to say that he hadn’t confirmed the story and, for now, it’s just “folklore.”

This is a fun story, and I love a little bit of baseball legend as much as anyone else. But both headlines are probably inaccurate. The mobile app headline reports it as fact (even though USA TODAY hadn’t apparently confirmed the story). And the online headline makes it seem that Werth is making the claim, even though seems to be skeptical.

The Washington Post handled the situation appropriately, reporting in its online headline, “Jayson Werth may have his his own truck with a long home-run.”

This is a silly, fun baseball story, so I know I risk sounding like a killjoy. But it may be worth examining whether USA TODAY is willing to have a lower-standard for accuracy in headlines on its mobile and web platforms in an effort to gin up clicks. I hope this isn’t the case.

On Wednesday, the Appalachian State University student newspaper reported on Twitter and Facebook that a popular Mexican restaurant was closing, then quickly backed off on its report in a series of tweets:

* 2:25 p.m.: We’ve heard some concerns about the information that Los is closing – working to follow up now.

We’re always happy to admit an oversight in our reporting process, and we’ll use the incident as a learning opportunity. Social media reporting is brand-new. There are still plenty of mistakes and lessons in our future.

All the same, however, we’re disappointed. Throughout the morning Wednesday, our Twitter timeline exploded with feedback. We even received a string of phone calls to our office.

All of a sudden, people cared—and it was all about a Mexican restaurant.

Sorry burrito lovers, in a list of the most important issues covered this year, the potential closing of Los wouldn’t even make the top 10.

We have never seen students engage with our content the way they did today. And frankly, we think there are things that deserve your attention more.

Instead of suddenly mobilizing when your quesadillas and margaritas are at stake, start engaging with issues that actually affect you—and the thousands of dollars you pay this university each year.”

Readers weren’t going to take this lecture from the people who got the story wrong. Chad Mukherjee wrote on Facebook:

Reporting that story about Los was basically slander, and that is why people are up in arms. And now you have the gall to accuse people of caring too much about their “quesadillas and margaritas”? You should really be ashamed of yourself. Arrogance will get you nowhere in life (and I could be wrong, but it probably won’t get you anywhere in your journalism career either).

And then there was this:

I’ve asked Appalachian editor-in-chief Justin Herberger to comment on this brouhaha and will post his response when/if it comes in. || UPDATE: An editor has responded and admits the tone of the editorial “was far from ideal.”

* Richard Huff says farewell to NYDN readers as he heads to CBS News. (NYDailynews.com) || Read about his #ferrytales.
* Prediction: Drones will be a big part of the future of journalism. (Fast Company)
* How the New York Times does social media. (photoshelter.com)
* Twitter becomes a real-time tool for campaigns. (Washington Post)
* Here are your White House Correspondents’ Association journalism award winners: (Politico.com)
* Congresswoman calls cops after video on Glenn Beck’s site brings in threatening calls. (Capital New York)
* Nick Denton predicts Buzzfeed “will collapse under the weight of its own contradictions.” Gawker.com)
* Denton’s comments shakeup “has been felt throughout the Internet.” (Adweek.com)